The cast of the First National Tour of Kinky Boots, coming to The 5th
Avenue Theatre. Photo by Matthew Murphy |
Seattle’s 5th Avenue Theatre’s latest show—or
should I say extravaganza— is the smash Broadway musical Kinky Boots, which has
just begun its national tour.
Despite the raucous music, wildly decadent costumes and
flashy lighting effects, Kinky Boots is at heart a touching little story with a
simple message about acceptance, courage and perseverance. Based on the hit
movie of the same name, it tells the story of Charlie Price (Steven Booth), a
young man struggling to figure out what he wants to do with his life who is
tasked with saving the dying shoe factory in Northampton, England he has
inherited from his father. On a trip to London with his fiancée, Nicola (Grace
Stockdale), he meets a drag queen named Lola (Kyle Taylor Parker) and they talk
about the flamboyant boots with high heels that drag queens wear and how they
can’t hold up to the weight of men. Charlie flashes on building sturdy “kinky
boots” as a means of saving the factory.
Kyle Taylor Parker stars as Lola in the First National Tour of Kinky Boots, coming to The 5th Avenue Theatre. Photo by Matthew Murphy |
It’s the story of how Charlie brings in Lola to help create
a line of boots and how the middle class workers in the factory react to
welcoming a drag queen into their world, and ultimately about the touching and
very real relationship between Charlie and Lola. And of course every musical must
have a love triangle. This one involves Charlie and his selfish and
manipulative fiancée and Lauren (Lindsay Nicole Chambers), the sweet factory worker
with the secret crush on him.
Kinky Boots the musical is based on the hit movie of the
same title, which was in turn based on a true story. The book for the musical was
written by the great Harvey Fierstein with music and lyrics by Cyndi Lauper and
direction and choreography by Jerry Mitchell.
Mitchell said he wanted the realism of the working-class
British world suffused with the fabulousness of the theater. “I come from
Paw-Paw, Michigan. It’s complete working class and there’s lot of my roots in
those people,” Mitchell said. “I went to Northampton myself and hung out. And I
toured the shoe factories . . . I knew the fabulous part of it; I knew I could
do that part. I wanted to know what the real part was.”
Parker, who was one of “Lola’s Angels” in the original
Broadway production and played the part of Lola many times as an understudy,
certainly has the fabulous part down pat, and he is believable and real and
down to earth. There have been many, many portrayals of drag queens with
stereotypical swishiness, but there is none of that in Parker’s portrayal. And
he’s a hell of a dancer.
Booth, who is endearing as Charlie, has performed in Glory Days and Avenue Q on Broadway. He has a terrific voice and good
moves—especially when he puts on the boots for the big finale (with credit to Mitchell
and Booth for not overdoing it). The duet between Lola and Charlie, “Not My
Father’s Son,” is one of the most moving moments in the play and one of the few
quiet songs in a play replete with rocking show tunes. The other quiet and
moving ballad is Lola’s solo on “Hold Me in Your Heart.”
The first couple of songs, “Price & Son Theme” and “The
Most Beautiful Thing in the World,” both performed by the full company, could
have used a little more pizazz. But then it kicks into high gear when we visit
the club where Lola and the Angels perform (“Land of Lola”).
Act one ends with a full-company rendition of the upbeat
song, “Everybody Say Yeah”—an exultant celebration with dancing on a moving
conveyor belt. Act two also ends with a celebratory anthem, “Raise You Up/Just
Be,” again with the whole company and this time with a knockout light show
(lighting designer Kenneth Posner, whose most impressive lighting in this show
was the multitude of soft spots on Lola’s solo on “Hold Me in Your Heart”).
Striking performances were turned in by Stockdale as Nicole
and Chambers as Lauren, and by Joe Coots as Don, a tough-guy factory worker.
David Rockwell’s scenic design, the Price & Son shoe
factor interior and exterior, is gritty and impressive.
One of the very few sore spots for me was an unnecessary
maudlin moment when they went overboard trying to milk sympathy at the end of
the beautiful “Hold Me in Your Heart” by bringing Lola’s father into the scene.
Interesting behind-the-scenes stories were provided by Mitchell
in a print interview provided to the press. One of those was that they had to build
the conveyor belts and try them out, and “I got on it and I wiped out, probably
four or five times . . .” so they added bars for safety which became part of
the choreography as dancers used the bars for swinging and jumping. The other
interesting back story was that like the original factory they had to go
through many trials in order to make boots what would stand up to large men
dancing in them during eight two-and-a-half-hour shows a week.
Kinky Boots won six Tony awards, including Best Musical,
Best Score (Cyndi Lauper) and Best Choreography (Jerry Mitchell).
Tues-Wed. 7:30 p.m., Thurs-Fri. 8 p.m., Sat- 2 and 8 p.m.,
Sun. 1:30 and 7 p.m.
5th Ave. Theatre, 1308 5th Ave.,
Seattle,
Tickets start at $45.25, (206) 625-1900 or (888) 5TH-4TIX.
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